Author Archive

Drew Robb

Let's go to the tape

But the fastest tape libraries use disks instead of tape.

Printers teem with security woes

Encryption, access controls help to prevent breaches.

Get the record straight

Satisfying storage demands is becoming more complex.

Knowledge as a sales pitch

For a collaboration solution, know your product and your customer.

No stopping wireless

Integrators to plan for secure access as demand grows.

Data warehouses need integrator's touch

To further a spirit of cooperation, agencies also are beginning to share information from disparate databases by sending some of that data to common data warehouses, where it can be merged, queried and analyzed.

EA helps mind the money

Intelligence is an imperfect science. Just ask CIA or the 9/11 Commission. Or EDS Corp., the contractor tasked with wrangling thousands of legacy systems into the Navy-Marine Corps Intranet. When EDS started the job, the Navy thought it had about 5,000 applications to integrate. EDS found more than 100,000.

DHS challenges private sector on cybersecurity

The Homeland Security Department issued a challenge today to IT vendors: Step up to security responsibilities.

Enterprise search engines pack a punch

Federal agencies have done an admirable job posting hundreds of millions of pages on intranets and public Web sites. But finding the right information can be an adventure. That's why agencies need powerful search engines.

Fed Mobile Computing Market Grows On

In the private sector, mobile computing has all but disappeared from the list of "Next Big Things." Once touted as the technology that would revolutionize how people work, it has been stifled by a lack of services and inadequate bandwidth.

Fed Mobile Computing Market Grows Despite Private-Sector Woes

In the private sector, mobile computing has all but disappeared from the list of "Next Big Things." Once touted as the technology that would revolutionize how people work, it has been stifled by a lack of services and inadequate bandwidth.

Imaging Is Everything

In Washington, image means more than just looking good. It also means creating forms and documents that are easily accessible to government workers and the public. In fact, imaging is so much in demand these days, it's hard to find an agency that doesn't have some sort of imaging project going on.

The Changing Landscape of The Federal Enterprise

Reading the daily headlines, one would think that everything is business as usual in Washington. But a fundamental change is under way in how the federal government handles its day-to-day information technology operations. Changes such as electronic government initiatives are being made possible by major shifts in the basic enterprise computing infrastructure. "The federal marketplace is undergoing a transformation from agency-centric, legacy-based, stove-piped systems and applications to a more private-sector model," said Pete Scalone of Computer Associates International Inc.

The Changing Landscape of The Federal Enterprise

Reading the daily headlines, one would think that everything is business as usual in Washington. Democrats and Republicans still fight each other's agendas. Politicians are under fire for financial misdeeds and extramarital activities. All the usual stuff.

E-Business as Usual for Federal Contractors

A sputtering new economy has high-tech companies refocusing attention on the old economy's largest enterprise ? the federal government ? where they see nothing but expansion ahead. "There is a significant push at the federal level to implement a wide range of e-business initiatives," said Bill Smithson, vice president for information technologies at Materials, Communications and Computers Corp.

SPECIAL REPORT: E-commerce in Government / E-Business Applications

A sputtering new economy has high-tech companies refocusing attention on the old economy's largest enterprise ? the federal government ? where they see nothing but expansion ahead.

Fed Helps ERP

It has been a tough year for enterprise resource planning vendors.

High-Speed Networking Connects Present to the Future

It's a familiar scene on the Enterprise. The bridge calls engineering: "Give us more power!" But this isn't the Starship Enterprise.